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Super League (Europe): Encyclopedia BETA


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Super League (Europe)

The engage Super League logo

Super League (Europe) is the only full-time professional rugby league competition operating in the northern hemisphere. Most of the teams are based in Great Britain, though there has been French involvement and French club Union Treiziste Catalane, known as Les Catalans Dragons, have joined for the 2006 season. As a result of sponsorship from engage Mutual Assurance the competition is currently officially known as the engage Rugby Super League.

During the league's regular season, each team plays 28 games over 28 rounds from February to September. At the end of the regular season, the top six teams in Super League play in the playoffs, which finishes with the Grand Final.

Teams

Super League (Europe)
TeamStadium!City/Area
Bradford BullsGrattan Stadium, OdsalBradford
Castleford TigersThe JungleCastleford
Les CatalansStade Aime GiralPerpignan, France
Harlequins RLTwickenham StoopTwickenham, London
Huddersfield GiantsGalpharm StadiumHuddersfield
Hull FCKC StadiumKingston upon Hull
Leeds RhinosHeadingley Carnegie StadiumLeeds
Salford City RedsThe WillowsSalford
St Helens RFCKnowsley RoadSt Helens
Wakefield Trinity WildcatsAtlantic Solutions StadiumWakefield
Warrington WolvesHalliwell Jones StadiumWarrington
Wigan WarriorsJJB StadiumWigan

History

The competition was first mooted during the Super League war as a way for Rupert Murdoch to gain the upper hand during the battle for supremacy with the Australian Rugby League. Murdoch approached the British clubs to form Super League (Europe) (SLE). A large sum of money aided the decision, and the competition got under way in 1996. Part of the deal saw rugby league switch from a winter to a summer season.

Initially, several mergers between existing clubs were proposed:
*Castleford, Wakefield and Featherstone Rovers would form Calder
*Hull FC and Hull Kingston Rovers would form Humberside
*Whitehaven RLFC, Workington Town, Barrow and Carlisle would form Cumbria
* Warrington and Widnes were to form Cheshire
*Salford and Oldham were to form Manchester
*Sheffield and Doncaster were to form South Yorkshire

However this proved so unpopular that only existing clubs were selected for the competition. Several clubs currently in the existing top flight were excluded, whilst other from the lower divisions (such as London Broncos now known as Harlequins Rugby League) were “fast-tracked” in on commercial grounds. A new team, Paris Saint Germain, was created to give a French dimension.

After two years Paris were dropped from the competition, thus the 'Europe' in 'Super League (Europe)', became somewhat otiose; it was however retained. Promotion and relegation between Super League and the Rugby League National Leagues was re-introduced, and in 2002 the SLE governing body re-integrated fully into the Rugby Football League. To most intents and purposes, Super League is now simply a re-titled first division of British Rugby League. However, in 2006, French side Les Catalans (also known as UTC or Catalans Dragons) from Perpignan joined the league. In order to facilitate this move, two clubs were relegated from Super League at the end of the 2005 season, with only one club coming up from the National Leagues, thus the number of clubs in Super League remained at 12.

After 2009 there will be no automatic promotion or relegation from Super League and new teams will be admitted on a franchise basis. 3 yearly reviews of franchises will take place to ensure ambitious clubs lower down the leagues can still be successful.

Structure

Currently, 12 teams compete in Super League. They play each other twice on a home-and-away basis. An additional six fixtures are then included. A play-off structure is then used to determine the two teams who will meet in the Super League Grand Final to decide the championship. Currently the top six teams enter the play-offs. The structure is designed to reward the teams finishing nearer the top with easier routes to the Grand Final, which is played at Old Trafford. The system works like this:

Week One
* Elimination Semi-final A: 3rd vs 6th
* Elimination Semi-final B: 4th vs 5th

Week Two
* Elimination Final: Winners of Elimination Semi-final A vs Winners of Elimination Semi-final B
* Qualification Match: 1st vs 2nd

Week Three
* Final Qualifier: Winners of Elimination Final vs Losers of Qualification Match

Week Three
* Grand Final: Winners of Qualification Match vs Winners of Final Qualifier

In earlier seasons the championship was decided on the basis of the league table alone, with the play-offs leading to a separate Premiership Final. Now a minor prize is given to the team finishing top (the League Leader's Shield); the real prize is to win the Grand Final.

Results

See Rugby League Championship for full list of championship winners (1895-date).
YearGrand Final winner Runner up League leader
1996n/an/aSt Helens
1997n/an/aBradford Bulls
1998Wigan WarriorsLeeds RhinosWigan Warriors
1999St HelensBradford BullsBradford Bulls
2000St HelensWigan WarriorsWigan Warriors
2001Bradford BullsWigan WarriorsBradford Bulls
2002St HelensBradford BullsSt Helens
2003Bradford BullsWigan WarriorsBradford Bulls
2004Leeds RhinosBradford BullsLeeds Rhinos
2005Bradford BullsLeeds RhinosSt Helens

2006 Season

The competition kicked off the weekend after the World Club Challenge. Bradford Bulls will be looking to retain the title they won in Super League X. This season saw the entry of Catalan Dragons, who are the first French team to compete since the demise of Paris Saint Germain at the end of Super League II.

For full results, see Super League XI.

See also

* Super League X (2005 Super League season)
* Super League XI (2006 Super League season)
* Challenge Cup
* World Club Challenge
* Rugby League National Leagues
* Sports league attendances

References

Super League - the first ten years, Phil Caplan and Jonathan R. Doidge, ISBN 0-7524-3698-8

External links

* Official site
* Results and tables from totalrl.com



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